Etherpad-lite relies on the user's browser to generate a random pad
name, but the current solution is not safe against collisions. In order
to generate unique pad names, the following modifications are made:
* use a PRNG instead of Math.random() and ensure uniform distribution
when selecting chars.
* choose the pad name length to achieve a specific number of bits of
security.
Closes: #3516
a) these rules:
[class^="icon-"]:before
[class*=" icon-"]:before
b) were the same as this one:
[data-icon]:before
except the rules in b) had a "content: attr(data-icon)" rule, too.
This commit groups all of them together, and gets rid of the "attr(data-icon)".
The commit that introduced these rules in the first place, and that are now
partially reverted, was 9aea689438 (move tiny bit
of font awesome we actually use into pad.css) from 2014-11-19.
Preparatory work for introducing colibris skin
This commit implements the following behaviour:
1. adds a function clientPluginNames() to hooks.js (mimicking what is done in
static.js), which returns an array containing the list of currently installed
client side plugins. The array is eventually empty.
2. calls that function in pad.html at rendering time (thus server-side) to
populate a class attribute.
Example results:
- with no client-side plugins installed:
<div id="editorcontainerbox" class="">
- with some client-side plugins installed:
<div id="editorcontainerbox" class="ep_author_neat ep_adminpads">
Looking at the existing code (src/node/hooks/express/static.js#L39-L57), a
client-side plugin is defined as a plugin that implements at least a client side
hook.
NOTE: there is currently no support for notifying plugin removal/installation
to the connected clients: for now, in order to get an updated class list,
the clients will have to refresh the page.
Fixes#3488
Since the original comparison compared for truthy and not for "===", and it's
3 AM now, I blindly negated it, in order to show how fragile it was in the first
instance.
No functional changes.
This is the final commit of this refactoring series.
Get rid of an else branch to simplify code layout. No functional changes at all.
==============
This series is an attempt to reduce the control structure depth of the code
base, maintaining at the same time its exact same behaviour, bugs included. It
is, in a sense, an initial attempt at a refactoring in the spirit of its
original definition [0].
The idea beyond this refactoring is that reducing the code depth and, sometimes,
inverting some conditions, bugs and logic errors may become easier to spot, and
the code easier to read.
When looked at ignoring whitespace changes, all of these diffs should appear
trivial.
[0] https://refactoring.com/
It's just synctactic sugar, but it is always better than executing string
concatenations in one's mind.
Do not do this with files in src/static, because we want to keep IE 11
compatibility.
The old "static/custom" directory is replaced by "static/skins/<skinName>",
where <skinName> is taken from settings.json.
When no value is found, a default of "no-skin" is assumed, so that backward
compatibility is maintained.
The most evident security concerns have been addressed.
Closes#3471.
skinName must be a single string (no directory separators in it) pointing to an
existing directory under /src/static/skins.
In case these conditions are not met, its value is rewritten to "no-skin".
Also, the value of skinName if sent to the client via clientVars for allowing
its use it in the browser.
Currently, an Etherpad skin requires the existence of 6 files:
- index.{css,js}
- pad.{css,js}
- timeslider.{css,js}
In the default empty skin (in static/custom), there were 2 small placeholders
({js,css}.template) to be copied in place by the startup script in case no skin
was in use.
Now that we are moving to multiple directories (see #3471) we can simply commit
the example files and remove the copying code from the startup script.
Not performing encoding/decoding when traversing logical domains is a security
risk.
String concatenation is not great, too, but this change is just focused on
allowing the implementation of skin support.